In China, utensils like chopsticks are used to eat foods that include rice. The bowl of rice is raised to the lips with one hand while the other holds the chopsticks. The rice is moved to the mouth using the chopsticks.
Ancient Greeks primarily used their hands for eating, as they believed it connected them more directly to their food. While they did have some utensils, such as spoons for liquid dishes, the use of knives and forks was not common. Meals were often communal, with food served on large platters, making hands more practical for sharing and enjoying the meal. Additionally, the cultural emphasis on social interaction during dining contributed to the preference for hand-eating.
Just their hands and spoons and forks. they used forks to cook spoons to eat but eat with mostly hands
writing
They barely used utensils. They used their hands for soup. For other stuff they used sticks and twigs.
China didn't directly support anyone but themselves. They had their hands full from Japan invading them. But technically they would be considered an allied power based on the fact that they fought the axis.
HANDS
Holding on to your knife and fork too tightly.... or perhaps if one's eating using hands as utensils, then finger-cramping can occur if the fingers aren't stretched enough during the meal? I have no idea - it this question for real?? I suppose anything is possible, so why not that then? ;) Holding on to your knife and fork too tightly.... or perhaps if one's eating using hands as utensils, then finger-cramping can occur if the fingers aren't stretched enough during the meal? I have no idea - it this question for real?? I suppose anything is possible, so why not that then? ;)
We (humans) can eat with utensils our hands, our mouth (with our teeth, tongue, salivary glands, etc.) and any other way to get food into our bodies.
There hands
they used stick and twigs and for soup their hands
A medium sized spoon for eating with.
Before forks were introduced, people primarily used their hands, knives, and spoons to eat. It was common for individuals to use a single knife for cutting and a spoon for scooping up food, with both hands being the primary utensils for consuming meals. Forks became popular in Europe during the Middle Ages and gradually replaced the practice of using hands for eating.
with your hands, no utensils.
Hands.
mostly spoons and also hands
Best way: stay away from them. Second choice: wash your hands frequently and avoid close contact with them and the things they have used (eating utensils, kleenex etc.).
Food utensils become contaminated when pathogens are transferred to its surface. This will happen when the utensils are not washed thoroughly, or someone with dirty hands touches them.